I Think We're Gonna Need A Bigger Boat

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 42:18

eMusic Review

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Garry Mullholland

eMusic Contributor

02.03.09
A silly concept hides what might be Norman Cook's best ever
2009 | Label: Southern Fried Records / RoyaltyShare

The new vocal project from Norman Cook — aka Fatboy Slim — is a curious beast. The decision to come up with a half-realized spoof concept — the idea is that this album is the long-lost recording by an imaginary '70s supergroup called The Brighton Port Authority — seems somewhat misguided, as if the record has something to hide. The truth is that the silly concept (and awful title) distracts from the happy reality that this is possibly the best album that the veteran dance producer has ever made; a delightfully varied, tuneful and strictly irony-free selection of songs, co-produced by engineer and long-time Cook collaborator Simon Thornton, and featuring a host of star guest vocalists.

Top marks go to Iggy Pop's lugubrious, jangle-rock take on The Monochrome Set's post-punk classic "He's Frank," Jamie T's PiL-like "Local Town," and the gorgeous, electro-ballad tribute to America that is "Seattle," sung by exciting new Brit singer-songwriter Emmy The Great. "Spade" ably justifies its unlikely pairing of Martha Wainwright with dub reggae. And although the theoretically exciting idea of twinning David Byrne and Dizzee Rascal for the Afro-pop of "Toe Jam" doesn't work in practice, it's the only disappointment on an album dominated by… read more »

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Toe Jam is great!

jordisunshine

Well, I only down loaded the David Byrne song- toe jam, and, in contrast to the official review, I thought it was great! Fun, bouncy song. Good for kids (tweeners) too.

user avatar

Norman delivers

herbalpudding

This is the best stuff Norman Cook has put out in years. "He's Frank" is vintage Fatboy, "Should I stay or Should I Blow" with Ashley Beedle is also an excellent reunion for the former Skint mates.

user avatar

The Final Straw!

johanm

I very much agree with my friends in countries like Australia, Italy, Norway, etc. We do pay the same subscription fee, don't we? Why do I receive emails promoting these albums, but I am not welcome to download it? I am seriously reconsidering my membership...

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I'm not sorry

Copek

I may not listen to this album more than 3 times, but at least it is available for download in my country! I rather like the first track,

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stupid newsletter

kjetilho

so incredibly annoying when the newsletter advertises albums which aren't available to the recipient. really shoddy work on eMusic's part.

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not available???

EMUSIC-00CF89F3

Not available also in Italy. I am a bit pissed off, since my saved for later is full of "not available"... start to negotiate better the rights.

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I'm sorry too

zoshi

I'm trying to buy this music, not get it for free!

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They're sorry

Adeptus

"We're sorry. Most of the good new stuff is unavailable for download in your country." Why do I keep subscribing?

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sorry again

barragas

really guy's, this we are sorry for any inconvinience its starting to get old. :p

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I Don't Know What eMusic Is Talking About

Batman

The David Byrne/Dizzee Rascal is the best song on this thing. I heard it months ago with no idea of the album's backstory or whatever. Nice surprise to see this here. Iggy's song is OK. Kind of limp, but it's one of my favorite Monochrome Set songs, so hoorah.

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They Say All Media Guide

The Brighton Port Authority is yet one more way that Norman Cook (aka Fatboy Slim, aka Beats International) has found to gather world-class musical weirdos around him and collaborate with them on the creation of funky, hooky, wave-your-hands-in-the-air dance pop. Unlike his other projects, though, this one apparently stretches way back into the 1970s, when many of the rough tracks on this collection were originally recorded. Over the years, Cook and his collaborator Simon Thornton worked with such disparate singers and songwriters as Iggy Pop, Martha Wainwright, David Byrne and Pete York, and though a good amount of this material was clearly added in much more recently (Dizzee Rascal’s contribution to “Toe Jam,” for example, is clearly not of 1970s vintage, nor does Iggy Pop sound like the young man he would have been back then), there’s a sense of anarchic fun to the proceedings that is very much reminiscent of the best music of the ’70s and ’80s. Cook being Cook, though, the fun is kept under pressure: there’s a sense of impending explosion energizing Iggy Pop’s “He’s Frank (Slight Return),” a crazily careening, Clash-y punk-funk groove behind Jamie T’s “Local Town,” and a tightly wound Caribbean rhythm underlying Byrne’s utterly brilliant “Toe Jam.” And Ashley Beedle’s “Should I Stay or Should I Blow,” with its hooky melody and alternating Latin and ska grooves, explicitly anticipates the Beats International sound to come. Not a single track disappoints. – Rick Anderson

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